Steelers’ record: 13-4
One year ago: Did not qualify for playoffs
Series record (including playoffs): Steelers lead, 21-11
STORYLINE
Terrell Suggs referred to this matchup as World War III, as Armageddon, and he then declared that the winner of the game “probably” would go on to win Super Bowl XLV. The general sentiment among the national media seemed to be that the Ravens were due to defeat the Steelers, especially in light of the way they had handled the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC Wild Card Round.
TURNING POINTAt halftime, the Steelers trailed by 21-7, and as Coach Mike Tomlin said, “We had kicked our own butts enough.” A 14-point lead in a game between these teams is unheard-of, but the Ravens came out in the second half playing as though they were trailing by two touchdowns instead of leading by two touchdowns.
STAT THAT STANDS OUT I
The Ravens finished with only 126 total net yards of offense, the second-lowest total allowed by the Steelers in the playoffs after the 123 Minnesota managed in Super Bowl IX. The Ravens had 28 yards of offense in the second half.
STAT THAT STANDS OUT II
Jeff Triplette’s crew worked the game, and so it should come as no surprise that there were 167 yards in penalties assessed to the two teams. His crew finished tied for the most personal fouls (7) and unsportsmanlike conduct (5) penalties called during the 2010 season. This group averaged the fourth-most penalty yards per game (114.9). There were two personal fouls called in the game, both against the Steelers.
WHAT WENT RIGHT
* After the Steelers won the toss and elected to defer,
* A post-whistle personal foul on
* A dump-off pass to Ray Rice turned into an opportunity for the Steelers. Ryan Clark forced the fumble that LaMarr Woodley recovered at the Ravens 23-yard line. Two plays later, a 9-yard Roethlisberger pass to
* Clark set up another Steelers touchdown, the one that tied the game at 21-21, with an interception that he returned to the Ravens 25-yard line. On third-and-6 from the 8-yard line, Roethlisberger fired a strike to Hines Ward for the tying touchdown with 1:21 left in the third quarter.* The turnover parade continued for the Ravens on their very next possession. Joe Flacco fumbled the snap on a second-and-10 from the Baltimore 23-yard line, and
* It was a tie game with just over two minutes remaining in the fourth quarter and the Steelers were facing a third-and-19 from their own 38-yard line. “In third-and-20 there is no such thing as a primary guy,” said Coach Mike Tomlin. “Hopefully somebody down the field was open and he was.” The “he” was
WHAT WENT WRONG
* On the Ravens second offensive possession – late in the first quarter – CB
* On a second-and-10 from their own 10-yard line, Terrell Suggs looped around and was able to record a sack/strip of Ben Roethlisberger, and after the ball laid on the turf for several seconds, Cory Redding picked it up and ran 13 yards for a touchdown and a 14-7 Ravens lead with 53 seconds left in the first quarter.
* When Mike Tomlin challenged the Redding touchdown, and it was unsuccessful, that meant the Steelers were out of challenges before the end of the first quarter.
* The Steelers sabotaged their offense with penalties on each of the Ravens first two punts. On the first,
* The poor field position preceded a second Steelers turnover, this one a lost fumble by Mendenhall, and after the Ravens converted a third-and-7 with an 8-yard catch-and-run by Ray Rice to the Pittsburgh 5-yard line, a touchdown pass to Todd Heap made the deficit 21-7 with 5:43 left in the first half.
* The capper to a miserable first half came with 21 seconds left in the second quarter when Shaun Suisham missed a 43-yard field goal, wide to the left.
* When








